Vaimaye Vellum (transl. Truth alone triumphs) is a 1997 Indian Tamil-language crime film directed by P. Vasu. The film stars Parthiban and Rachana Banerjee. The film, produced by S. R. Balajee, had musical score by Deva and was released on 14 February 1997.[1][2]
Vaimaye Vellum | |
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Directed by | P. Vasu |
Written by | P. Vasu |
Produced by | S. R. Balajee |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Raveendar |
Edited by | P. Mohanraj |
Music by | Deva |
Production company | S. B. Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 150 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Tamil |
Perumal (Rajan P. Dev), a corrupt police officer, is transferred to the same area after 20 years.
In the past, Perumal's wife died during her delivery and Perumal felt that his newborn son brought him bad luck. Perumal later married Saraswathi (Vennira Aadai Nirmala). Despite being a clever student, Raja was hated by his father while his stepmother Saraswathi took care of him like her own son. One day, Raja witnessed his father Perumal taking bribe from a woman. He stole the bribe from his father and put it in a temple donation box. To punish him, Perumal sent his innocent son to jail.
Raja (Parthiban) is now a rickshaw man and also a rowdy who cannot tolerate the injustice so he often goes to jail. Meanwhile, Maari (Jojan), a rich industrialist, and his henchman Kaasi (Majid) kidnap the children of rich businessmen and ransom them. A journalist is determined to stop this and hires Raja for protecting his daughter Meena (Rachana Banerjee) from Alex's henchmen. Soon, Raja clashes with Maari, Kaasi and his father Perumal.
Vaimaye Vellum | |
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Soundtrack album by Deva | |
Released | 1997 |
Recorded | 1996 |
Genre | Feature film soundtrack |
Length | 29:40 |
Producer | Deva |
The film score and the soundtrack were composed by Deva. The soundtrack, released in 1997, features 6 tracks with lyrics written by Vaali.[3]
Track | Song | Singer(s) | Duration |
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1 | "Amma" | P. Unni Krishnan | 4:44 |
2 | "Bagalu Bagalu" | Deva, Malgudi Subha | 4:55 |
3 | "Bagalu Bagalu" | Shahul Hameed, Malgudi Subha | 4:55 |
4 | "Dhinamthorum" | Malaysia Vasudevan, Deva | 5:01 |
5 | "Kuiyil Pattu" | Krishnaraj, K. S. Chithra | 4:57 |
6 | "Maaman Parkiran" | Mano, Swarnalatha | 5:08 |
The film opened to positive reviews from critics.[4] Geocities wrote "The strength and the weakness of the movie is its story itself. Though the core story is very interesting, it is also unbeleivable sometimes. This could have been avoided by good screenplay and direction. But apparently director P.Vasu has spent most of his time in masala things."[5]